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Bajablue

1/17/2013 1:44 PM EST

Yes on the outsourced jobs but no to spending what you/we do not have ...

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any1

1/17/2013 12:28 PM EST

I think that most of the EU realizes that stimulus is needed for some countries. ...

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New year already tough for EU

Jennifer Baljko

1/16/2013 4:06 PM EST

The new year hasn't given Europe much to celebrate yet. Recently released industrial and employment data shows the ongoing drag that austerity and recession prevention measures are having on the economy here.

Industrial production across the euro zone fell for the third straight month in November, according to Eurostat. Output slipped 0.3 percent from October and 3.7 percent from November 2011. The consensus forecast had called for 0.1 percent growth.

The year-over-year slide was the biggest since November 2009. And most indicators from the last three months of the year seem to point to a third consecutive quarter of general contraction for the 17-country bloc.

News reports have attributed the decline to across-the-board weakness and steep drops in the production of intermediate and capital goods. But a rising unemployment rate isn't helping matters. The euro zone's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for November rose 0.1 percentage points from October and 1.2 percentage points from November 2011 to 11.8 percent, according to Eurostat. For comparison's sake, the US unemployment rate for November was 7.8 percent.

There was a dim positive note for the electronics industry. Industrial output in Germany, a hub for the high-tech and auto sectors, rose a modest 0.1 percent in November, Eurostat said. The country also had one of the lowest unemployment rates in the EU (5.4 percent).

I don't know about you, but this kind of news keeps turning my stomach, especially as someone based in Europe. It's like the recession will never end here, and there's really no end in sight.

What does this mean for the electronics supply chain? We'll know more about how individual companies fared when earnings are announced in the next few weeks, but I'm not expecting stellar overall results. As we've reported before, many of the high-tech bellwethers have been struggling the last few quarters, bumping along slowly toward recovery or moving forward with significant shakeups.

If I had to put money down, I'd bet we'll hear companies -- especially those dependent on consumer holiday sales -- say revenue conservatively inched up in the last quarter of 2012, though new orders in Europe were slow. Anything other than that would surprise me.

What will be more interesting is how companies and executives respond to Europe's ongoing economic slump. We all know it's an important and mature market, but what measures will executives announce now that it looks like the EU will report three consecutive quarters of economic contraction? How will they help turn these numbers around?

Jennifer Baljko is a contributing writer at EBN, an EE Times sister site. This article was originally posted on EBN. 

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elPresidente

1/17/2013 2:44 AM EST

Austerity is a death spiral - Europe's in it and the Republicans in the USA are hellbent to dive in as well, not able to learn from Europe's mistakes that cutting only leads to more cutting. Europe needs stimulus, not cuts.

It also, like the USA, needs to bring its outsourced jobs back from China. Unemployed people don't buy stuff, leading to more unemployment.

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Bajablue

1/17/2013 1:44 PM EST

Yes on the outsourced jobs but no to spending what you/we do not have (borrowing). We will have to go through a few bad years of austerity to get back to prosperity. Stop borrowing and go "paycheck to paycheck".

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any1

1/17/2013 12:28 PM EST

I think that most of the EU realizes that stimulus is needed for some countries. The question is how much and how is it structured.

Similarly here in the US economic recovery is geographically uneven. I think this contributes to the political polarity that we are seeing here.

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